Stories of Holocaust survivors retold by holograms

JOHN ROGERS
Associated PressPublished: February 3, 2013 6:03PM

LOS ANGELES (AP) -- For years, Holocaust survivor Pinchus Gutter has told the tragic story of watching his parents and 10-year-old twin sister herded into a Nazi death camp's gas chambers so quickly that he had no time to even say goodbye.

He was left instead with an enduring image he has carried with him through 70 years: that of his sister vanishing into a sea of people doomed to die.

Only this time the elderly, balding man wasn't really there as he recounted the horror of the Holocaust to an audience at the University of Southern California.

It was the 80-year-old survivor's digital doppelganger that was doing the talking as it gazed at its audience, sometimes tapping its feet as it paused to consider a question.